naja, mich machen Reichmans Aussagen stutzig (ok, vermutlich Vorserienmodell): http://www.luminous-landscape.com/reviews/cameras/Panasonic-L1.shtml
Dort dann:
No Dynamic Buffering
Any photographer shooting reportage, news, fashion, sports, or any activity where rapid shooting is required will find themselves frustrated with the L1. The reason is this. There is a large enough shooting buffer, and the camera shoots moderately quickly. But, once you remove your finger from the shutter release, the memory buffer starts to write to the SD card and no further pictures can be taken until the buffer is completely empty.
If you have taken one shot (RAW+JPG) and then try to take another one right away you are delayed by a second or so. If you have shot a burst of 4-6 frames, and then a few seconds later want to take just one more frame, you can't ? not until the buffer is empty. I don't have experience with every camera on the market, but frankly, I have never used a DSLR with this limitation. Digicams, yes, but not DSLR.
Regardless of whether the Panasonic L1 is unique in this regard or not, the point is that I find this behaviour unacceptable. The other annoyances discussed early in this section are just that ? annoyances. If I was in the market for what the L1 has to offer none would deter me from making the purchase. But I wouldn't consider buying this camera with its current buffer design. On my week shooting with it in Iceland, simply as a snapshot camera, I found that I lost a great many visual moments because the shutter wouldn't release.
The photograph below titled Bill's Epiphany is but one example. Bill Atkinson had found a shot that he liked and set up for it. (Not something that happens often). As the self timer was running prior to shutter release Bill raised his arms to avoid touching the camera. I took the shot. A split second later his arms became fully extended because (who knows) maybe he realized that this was going to be a really good one. In any event, I pressed the shutter release to capture it, and nothing. The buffer was writing. Moment lost. Totally unacceptable.
Ja, aber das bezieht sich auf die Lumix L-1, nicht auf die Leica.